Science

Private lunar lander to carry ‘memory disk’ of 275 human languages to the moon in 2024

three people hold a small metal disk inside a frame while posing for a picture in front of a sign that reads

Many of us remember building time capsules to preserve memories from our lives on the ground. Now, on a bigger scale, humanity’s languages and culture will get their own safeguards on a mission to the moon.

ispace, a Japanese lunar exploration company that’s working to put more human presence in space, has teamed up with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) to take an important part of our humanity and preserve it on the moon during its upcoming Hakuto-R Mission 2, which will send a robotic lander to the lunar surface.

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